Dan Gruar is a Professor at University of Houston and working in the field of Molecular Evolution. In 2006, he published article in Molecular and Genome Evolution.
According to his reported that human genome portion is between 10-15% and 25% upper limited was observed. Hence this functional DNA.
He estimated mutation rate and average prehistoric reproduction rate shown that 8 to 14 % of DNA is functional and he did not belive ENCODE constrium.
ENCODE is Encyclopedia of DNA Elements which mainly integrating multiple technologies to interpert the human genome sequence for study human biology
In 2012, Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) showed that 80% of the genome was biochemical functional.
Dan Gruar and the ENCODE consortium have proposed different percentages for how much of the human...
Explain the proposed importance of “junk DNA” in the human genome with respect to the proliferation and horizonal transfer of cis-regulatory elements into new chromosomal locations. Explain, in as much detail as you can, how the mobile DNA, containing, these cis-elements, can influence expression of functional and genes and potentially enable new gene function or activity.
how do you solve this? Animals have anywhere from one to three opsin genes in their genomes. These genes encode proteins that sense different wavelengths of light and confer color vision. a. The relationship between the human opsin gene that senses light in the blue range and the dog opsin gene that senses light in the blue range is ✓ [Select] Pseudogene Ortholog Paralog the human opsin gene that senses light in the blue range and the human gene that...
we have learned how different traditions try to explain and understand the human problem. what explanation do you think make more sense in our times
The human genome contains about 20,000 genes, but the human body can generate over 100,000 different proteins. How is it possible that humans have so few genes but can generate so many proteins? A. Humans likely have over 100,000 genes, but many have yet to be identified B. mRNAs of different genes can recombine to generate many different proteins C. the majority of proteins found within a cell are acquired from the environment D. mutations in DNA generate many versions...
23. How do genomic and cDNA libraries differ? Which can be screened with antibodies and why? 24. How are oligonucleotides, once important as probes for screening libraries, used today? 25. What is the difference between cloning and PCR? 26. Why did scientists push for the human genome to be sequenced?
Please help me 6. how much of the human genome is composed of transposome? c. d. e. -10% -50% 100%
Imagine that you are observing two human cells under a microscope. They are both from the same individual but do not look the same. You can conclude: 1.The two cells do not have the same genome 2.The two cells have the same genome but are experssing different genes 3.It is impossible to tell if the two cells have the same genome from what we know about the samples. 4.One of the cells is prokaryotic while the other is eukaryotic
How do each of the traditional approaches to organizing (e.g., functional, different divisional structures, etc.) differ in what they allow a company to do well and in what challenges they provide for organizations? How does the choice of organizational structure impact firm capabilities? Given this, what differences might you expect in the structures of firms using different strategic approaches? What about in their use of organizational controls and/or other organization processes? What constraint(s) of traditional approaches to organizing are being...
If you had to come up with a dollar estimate for how much one human life is worth, what would you say and why?
2. Human blood is grouped into four types. The percentages of Americans with each type are: Type O 43%, 40%, B 12%, AB 5% Choose one American at random. Find the probability that this person: has type O blood has type A or B blood has type A and type B blood How many different ways can 4 tickets be selected from 10 tickets if each ticket wins a different prize? What if each ticket wins the same prize? If...